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Priced Out Of Home: Why Working People Are Now Living In Caravans In Spain

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More people are living in caravans across Spain. Photo credit: Sonia Bonet/Shutterstock

For many people, living by the sea sounds like the dream. For around 100 people on Málaga’s Sacaba beach, it has become the only way they can keep a roof over their heads. Now they fear they could lose even that. Finding somewhere to live has become one of the biggest worries for people across Spain. Rents continue to climb, buying a home feels out of reach for many, and affordable housing has become increasingly difficult to find. 

In cities such as Málaga, where demand has surged in recent years, many residents say they are being priced out of the very places where they work. That reality is now playing out in full view on the edge of one of the Costa del Sol’s busiest beaches. Around a hundred people remain living in caravans, camper vans and motorhomes at Sacaba despite an expected eviction that, for now, has yet to happen. For those living there, every passing day brings more uncertainty. They know they could be asked to leave at any moment, but many insist they have nowhere else to go.

“They’ll come when our guard is down”

Residents woke this week expecting the Policía local and municipal tow trucks after Málaga City Council announced plans to clear the site, instead, the morning passed quietly. that has done little to reassure the people living there. Many believe the operation has simply been delayed and fear the authorities will return once the attention surrounding the case fades. One resident summed up the mood, saying they believed officials would “throw us out when our guard is down.”

For families, pensioners and workers living at Sacaba, that uncertainty has become part of everyday life. Some have packed belongings ready to leave at short notice, while others simply wait, unsure whether tomorrow will bring another normal day or the loss of the only home they have.

This is no longer just about caravans

It would be easy to dismiss Sacaba as another dispute over illegal parking, that would miss the bigger picture. Many of the people living there are not tourists extending a holiday or travellers choosing an alternative lifestyle. They are workers, couples and families who say they have been pushed there by a housing market they can no longer afford.

Some hold down full-time jobs in Málaga. Others have lived in the city for years. Despite working, they say paying market rents has become impossible. The camper van or caravan was never meant to be permanent,It became the only realistic option.

A problem being repeated across Spain

Housing organisations have warned for years that rising rents and a shortage of affordable homes are forcing more people into increasingly precarious living situations. What was once considered unusual is becoming more common. Across Spain, more people are living in caravans, converted vans or temporary accommodation because they cannot secure a conventional rental.

Others move between campsites or informal settlements while trying to save enough money to return to permanent housing. Málaga has become one of the cities most affected by rising housing costs. Demand has grown rapidly, fuelled by population growth, tourism and international buyers, while the supply of affordable homes has struggled to keep pace. For many local workers, the result has been simple. They earn enough to work in the city, but not enough to live in it.

Residents want a solution, not a confrontation

Those living at Sacaba insist they are not refusing to cooperate, their message has remained consistent. They are asking for somewhere else to go. Residents have proposed creating an association, registering formally and opening discussions with Málaga City Council in the hope of finding an alternative location rather than simply being removed.

Housing campaign group Un Techo por Derecho, which has been supporting residents, argues that clearing the site without providing another option will not solve the housing problem. It will simply move it elsewhere.

The council has already taken action

Although the expected eviction has not yet taken place, Málaga City Council has already restricted access to the area. Fencing has been installed and new caravans have been prevented from entering, signalling that officials still intend to recover the land. Exactly when any removal operation might happen remains unclear. That uncertainty has left residents constantly watching for police vehicles or council contractors arriving at the entrance.

What happens next?

Nobody knows how long the current situation will continue, the council has not confirmed when any eviction could take place, while residents remain convinced it is only a matter of time. Whatever happens over the coming days, Sacaba has become more than a local dispute over caravans parked near the beach.

It has become another symbol of Spain’s housing crisis, for years, caravans parked beside the sea have been associated with holidays, freedom and weekends away. Today, for around 100 people on Málaga’s coastline, they represent something very different. They are kitchens, bedrooms, living rooms and, for now at least, the only homes they have left.

As the debate over housing affordability continues across Spain, Sacaba offers a stark picture of what happens when wages fail to keep up with the cost of somewhere to live. For the people waking up there each morning, the conversation about housing is no longer political or theoretical. It is about whether they will still have somewhere to sleep tomorrow.

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Ryanair Passengers From Spain Left Nearly 300km From Destination After Fuel Emergency

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Ryanair passengers from Seville were diverted to Brest after disruption at Nantes. Credit: Niels Baars / Unsplash

Passengers flying from Seville to Nantes landed in Brest instead after a runway incident involving an Air Nostrum aircraft disrupted arrivals in western France. The Ryanair crew declared a fuel emergency before landing safely, leaving travellers facing an unexpected diversion far from their planned destination.

Seville passengers landed in Brest after Nantes runway disruption

A Ryanair flight from Seville to Nantes was diverted to Brest on Monday, July 6, after an earlier incident involving an Air Nostrum aircraft reportedly left the runway at Nantes Atlantique Airport unavailable for incoming flights.

Flight FR5448, operated by a Boeing 737-800, had been due to land in Nantes after departing from southern Spain. Aviation tracking reports said the aircraft carried out a missed approach at Nantes, entered holding, then diverted to Brest Bretagne Airport.

The flight landed safely in Brest shortly after 8pm local time, according to aviation reports. The aircraft was identified by flight-tracking sources as EI-EBK.

For passengers, the disruption meant arriving at a different airport around 290 kilometres by road from Nantes, depending on the route. For those with hotel bookings, onward trains, car hire or people waiting at arrivals, the incident turned a routine Spain-to-France flight into a much more stressful evening.

Air Nostrum incident reportedly blocked the Nantes runway

The disruption at Nantes was linked to Air Nostrum flight IB1222, an Iberia Regional service from Nantes to Madrid. Aviation Safety Network and Airlive both reported that the Air Nostrum CRJ-1000 suffered a tyre burst and engine-related problem shortly after take-off before returning to Nantes. Airlive reported that debris was later found on the runway and that flight operations were temporarily suspended while inspections were carried out.

Air Nostrum is a Spanish regional airline that operates flights under the Iberia Regional brand. According to the company, it operates more than 200 daily flights to or from 60 airports in nine countries across Europe and North Africa.

At the time of writing, the most detailed public accounts of the Nantes sequence came from aviation tracking and incident-monitoring sources rather than a full official investigation report. However, the core sequence reported by aviation sources is that the Air Nostrum incident affected runway availability, forcing other aircraft, including the Ryanair flight from Seville, to abandon planned landings.

How a fuel emergency gave the Ryanair flight priority to land

The phrase “fuel emergency” can sound very dramatic, but in aviation it has a specific operational meaning. It doesn’t automatically mean an aircraft is about to run out of fuel or burst into flames. It means the crew has calculated that priority handling is needed because the aircraft’s fuel situation no longer allows for further delay in the normal way.

SKYbrary, the aviation safety knowledge base, explains that a fuel emergency is an explicit statement that priority handling by air traffic control is required and expected. Final reserve fuel is protected fuel intended to keep an aircraft airborne for a further period under defined conditions. For jet aircraft, aviation guidance commonly refers to 30 minutes of fuel at holding speed in standard conditions.

In this case, the missed approach at Nantes, the period of holding and the diversion to Brest all added time to a flight that had originally been planned to land in Nantes. Declaring an emergency allowed the crew to receive priority for the landing at Brest.

The important passenger point is that the Ryanair aircraft landed safely. A fuel emergency is serious, but it is also part of the safety system designed to make sure aircraft are not left waiting when margins are reduced.

How these diversions can leave travellers with extra costs and uncertainty

Although the aircraft landed safely, passengers were still left in the practical position of being at the wrong airport. Brest is not a simple terminal change from Nantes, and onward transport late in the day can be difficult, especially for families, tourists or residents returning home.

Under European Union air passenger rights guidance, when passengers are accepted on a flight to an alternative airport, the airline is generally responsible for transport costs between that alternative airport and the original destination airport, or another nearby destination agreed with the passenger.

Compensation is a bit less straight-forward. EU rules allow claims in some cases when passengers arrive at their final destination three hours or more late, but airlines can avoid compensation if they prove the disruption was caused by extraordinary circumstances. A runway closure caused by another aircraft incident may fall into that category, depending on the facts. Passengers affected by the diversion would still be sensible to keep boarding passes, airline messages, receipts and evidence of when they eventually reached Nantes.

The next clarification is likely to come from the operators or aviation authorities on the exact sequence of the Air Nostrum incident, the length of the runway closure and how passengers on the diverted Ryanair flight were eventually taken on to their planned destination.

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Fatboy Slim Sends Mallorca Into A Frenzy

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The king of big beat proved exactly why he remains one of the world’s most celebrated DJs as Fatboy Slim delivered an electrifying performance at Es Jardí in Calvià, transforming a warm Mallorcan night on Friday July 3 into one giant open-air dancefloor.

From the moment Norman Cook stepped behind the decks, thousands of fans erupted, with the iconic British DJ unleashing hit after hit from a career spanning more than four decades. It was a celebration of dance music at its finest, as Mallorca turned out in force to praise him (as they should.)

A soundtrack of dance music classics

The crowd barely had a moment to catch its breath as Fatboy Slim rolled through an arsenal of timeless anthems. “The Rockafeller Skank” immediately ignited the audience, while favourites including “Praise You”, “Right Here, Right Now” and “Weapon of Choice” prompted thousands of voices to sing every word back to the stage.

True to form, Cook blended his biggest hits with inventive mash-ups and remixes, seamlessly weaving classic tracks into modern dance beats. One standout moment came during a remix incorporating an Elton John classic, accompanied by spectacular visuals that lit up the huge LED screens and perfectly complemented the music.

The production matched the performance throughout, with vibrant graphics, dazzling lighting and immersive visuals adding another dimension to an already unforgettable evening.

An electric atmosphere under the stars

There was a festival buzz from the moment gates opened, but as darkness fell the energy reached another level. Fans of all ages packed the venue, dancing from the opening beats until the final track.

Fatboy Slim has always had a unique ability to unite audiences, and that spirit was on full display. Every iconic drop was greeted with deafening cheers, creating the kind of communal atmosphere that has become synonymous with his live shows.

One of dance music’s greatest showmen

Born Norman Cook in Surrey, England, Fatboy Slim became one of the defining figures of the 1990s big beat movement. His groundbreaking albums, including You’ve Come a Long Way, Baby, helped bring dance music into the mainstream, earning him a Grammy Awards, multiple Brit Awards and worldwide acclaim. Even after more than 40 years behind the decks, he continues to headline major festivals across the globe while reinventing his live performances.

Es Jardí continues to grow

The concert also showcased why Es Jardí has become one of Mallorca’s standout summer music destinations. Set within the former Mallorca Live venue in Calvià, the boutique open-air concert series combines international headline acts with Mediterranean surroundings, food, culture and an increasingly impressive production. This year’s edition introduced a redesigned main stage with new LED screens, alongside expanded cultural and hospitality spaces, making the experience bigger than ever.

If Fatboy Slim’s opening night is anything to go by, Es Jardí’s 2026 season is set to be one of its most memorable yet.

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188 People Evacuated As Forest Fire Strikes Grazalema

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Grazalema area blaze out of control. Credit: EMA infoca X

Evacuation numbers were raised to 188 on Monday night from a forest fire near Grazalema, a village in Cadiz province. The start of the blaze began shortly after 1pm at El Alamillo in the Sierra de Grazalema mountain area, near Ronda. Evacuations affected second homes in the Gadiovar area and roughly a dozen hotels plus rural lodges nearby.

Smoke and ash spread quickly to the nearby village of Zahara de la Sierra and appeared visible from Algodonales and from Ronda.

Rapid spread forces road closures

Flames advanced into Las Veguetas and crossed over the main road to Ronda. Closures hit that road and the Grazalema-Zahara link via Ribera del Gaidovar, where more evacuations continued. Slopes and valleys in the park helped the fire move faster than expected.

Extensive resources tackle blaze

Andalucia’s emergency agency activated INFOCA operational ‘situation one’ (the highest alert) over risks to people and property. An advanced command post was opened in Grazalema’s main square, previously used in the dramatic February floods.

Over 150 ground workers as well as 15 aircraft were sent to tackle the fire. Focus was kept on the right flank, advancing to Ribera del Gaidovar with a pending possible southerly wind change that would increase intensity.

Initial evacuation figures break down

Numbers included 60 guests at the Hotel Fuerte in Grazalema, 40 from nearby homes and nine from La Vegueta. Even more residents were forced to leave Ribera del Gaidovar later. Flames had not reached the hotel or houses so far, though rural spots with animals were seriously exposed.

Temporary housing options made available

Staff opened El Olivar pavilion for those displaced. Only one family used it at first while most went to second family homes in the village. Zahara de la Sierra prepared its town hall function room for people affected by road cuts and trapped in the area.

Leaders stress precautionary approach

Vice President Antonio Sanz of the Junta de Andalucia said that this was a second major challenge for Grazalema after the floods. He issued a message calling for calm, and confirming resources focused on saving inhabited areas. Elevated temperatures and the Levante wind kept influencing the fire in the rugged sierra terrain. Officials warned evacuation totals could rise further.

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